general anesthetics Flashcards

1
Q

what are the goals of general anesthesia?

A
Amnesia / Hypnosis
 - Hypnosis – impairment of perceptive awareness
Analgesia
 - Lack of pain sensation
Akinesia
 - Lack of motor movement
Control of physiology
 - Block sympathetic responses to stimuli
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2
Q

what are the pharmacologic components of a general anesthetic?

A

Pharmacologic components of a general anesthetic
- Inhalational agents
- Induction and intravenous amnestic agents
Propofol, Thiopental, Ketamine, benzodiazepines
- Neuromuscular blocking agents
- Opioids
- Local anesthetics
- Reversal agents and antagonists

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3
Q

what’s the concentration gradient for general anesthetic? and what are the factors that change this?

A

Concentration gradient:
delivered > inspired > alveolar > arterial > brain

Factors
inspired concentration
alveolar ventilation
solubility
cardiac output
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4
Q

what are the systemic effects of inhalation anesthetics?

A
- Respiratory
 decrease tidal volume
 increase respiratory rate
 blunt response to CO2
 bronchodilation
- Cardiovascular
 vasodilation
 decrease contractility
 decrease blood pressure
- Central nervous system
 decrease cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen
 cerebral vasodilation
 increase cerebral blood flow
- Other organs: renal, hepatic, uterine
- Malignant Hyperthermia
Autosomal dominant hypermetabolic disorder
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5
Q

what is meant by the balanced technique?

A

No single agent can achieve all goals safely
Commonly, a combination of inhaled and intravenous agents is used
Many Variables:
- medical condition of the patient
- surgical procedure
- patient’s age, weight, etc
- intraoperative events

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6
Q

do we know the mechanism of action of inhaled anethetics?

A

no, we don’t know the complete picture

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7
Q

what are the theories behind the mechanism of action of inhaled agents?

A

Unitary Hypothesis (Claude Bernard) 1870’s
- All anesthetic act through a common mechanism
Meyer-Overton rule ~ early 1900’s
- Strong correlation between potency of anesthetics and their solubility in (olive) oil
Old theory: volatile anesthetics act nonspecifically on hydrophobic lipid components of cells

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8
Q

what is the mechanisms of action at excitatory nicotinic Ach receptors and inhibitory GABA receptors?

A

At Excitatory Nicotinic ACh receptors:
- anesthetic binding decreases excitatory cholinergic currents, making the generation of action potentials less likely
At Inhibitory GABA receptors:
- anesthetic binding increases chloride fluxes, hyperpolarizing neurons, and making the generation of action potentials less likely

Suppression of motor responses primarily in spinal cord
Hypnosis and amnesia occurs within the brain
Various sites includes reticular activating system, cerebral cortex, cuneate nucleus, hippocampus, etc.
Various receptors involved
Most studied so far: GABA, nicotinic acetylcholine, glycine, N-methyl D-aspartate

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9
Q

what is minimum alveolar concentration?

A

MAC is the concentration at 1 atmosphere that produces immobility in 50% of subjects exposed to a noxious stimulus - skin incision
MAC is a measure of potency
Similar to ED50
95% of subjects are immobile to noxious stimulus at 1.3 MAC
Similar to ED95
MAC values are additive for anesthetic gases
eg. nitrous oxide and sevoflurane)
Various factors affect MAC
Age, temperature, pregnancy, extreme physiologic states (hypotension, acidosis, etc.)

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10
Q

what are intravenous agents?

A
  • Induction Agents
    one “arm-brain” circulation
    rapid redistribution terminates effect
    eg. propofol, ketamine, thiopental, etomidate
  • Benzodiazepines
    for premedication or co-indcution
    eg. midazolam, diazepam, lorazepam
    reversal: flumazenil
  • Opioids
    used to blunt hemodynamic response to intubation and surgical incision
    adequate intraoperative analgesia leads to comfortable patient upon emergence
    eg. fentanyl, sufentanil, remifentanil, morphine, demerol
    reversal: naloxone
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11
Q

for intravenous agents, what are neuromuscular blocking agents?

A
- Neuromuscular blocking agents
aka “muscle relaxants”
uses:
facilitate intubation
facilitate surgical access
prevent movement in critical surgery/tests
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12
Q

for intravenous agents, neuromuscular blocking agents what are depolarizing?

A
Depolarizing
only succinylcholine used clinically
mechanism of action:
binds to NMJ nicotinic cholinergic receptor
causes depolarization and fasciculations
offset by diffusion and hydrolysis
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13
Q

what are non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents?

A
Non-depolarizing
rocuronium, cisatracurium, pancuronium
mechanism of action: competitive inhibition of acetylcholine at NMJ
drug choice based on:
onset/offset
elimination profile
side effects
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14
Q

what are neuromuscular reversal agents?

A
  • Mechanism of action:
    inhibit cholinesterase
    increase [acetylcholine] at NMJ
  • Side effects:
    bronchospasm and bradycardia (muscarinic cholinergic agonism)
    prevented by anticholinergic agents: atropine or glycopyrrolate
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